Archaeology Biblical Ally Or Adversary? By
Paul L. Maier
SYNOPSIS
It is generally assumed that archaeological
digs in the Near East usually confirm the biblical record. In recent
years, however, various groups of radical revisionists have been claiming
quite the opposite: excavations in Israel and elsewhere show that the
early history of the Hebrews is very different from what is claimed
in the Pentateuch and the rest of the Old Testament. Some of the more
extreme critics, known as "biblical minimalists," even deny the historicity
of Abraham and the patriarchs, the Israelite sojourn in Egypt, the Exodus,
and Joshua's conquest of the Promised Land. They further question whether
David and Solomon ever existed, at least as the powerful sovereigns
described in the Old Testament.
Archaeological excavations across the past
150 years, however, have yielded more than enough results to demonstrate
that such revisionism is vastly overdone and sensationalistic. The product
of such shoddy methodology, in fact, relies too heavily on arguments
from silence or absence. Again and again, what has been found in the
ground has meshed remarkably well with what is claimed in the Old Testament,
and truth is not served when radical revisionist critics ignore or misinterpret
irrefutable evidence. They claim that they currently stand at the forefront
of biblical research, but quite the opposite is the case, and many,
if not most, leading archaeologists and biblical scholars reject their
extreme conclusions. The spade remains the Bible's best friend.
Christian organizations often funded early
excavations in the Near East, and the portrait of a faith-filled archaeologist
marching off to his dig with the Bible in one hand and a spade in the
other was quite familiar. Archaeological greats such as William Foxwell
Albright virtually invented the discipline called "biblical archaeology,"
so assured were they that "the stones" would indeed "cry out" the truth
of Scripture.
A series of stunning archaeological discoveries
that directly corroborated places, personalities, and events in the
Old and New Testaments only confirmed the general impression that biblical
records were historically reliable. Journals such as Biblical Archaeology
Review (BAR) and Bible and Spade implied as much in their titles.
Over the past decade, however, a strong countercurrent
has developed among some scholars of the Near East who claim quite the
opposite. A group often styled as "biblical minimalists" sees little
or no correlation between archaeological and biblical evidence and thus
no reliable history in the Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament). Leading
spokesmen among the minimalists are Thomas L. Thompson and Niels P.
Lemche of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, with like-minded, postmodernist
colleagues in both the East and the West.
In 2001, Israel Finkelstein, a revisionist
archaeologist with similar views, along with Neal A. Silberman, penned
a widely read book: The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of
Ancient Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts.1 This "new vision"
controverted traditional Jewish and Christian views of both the historical
reliability of the Hebrew Bible and how it came to be. An even more
popular vetting of this "vision" was a much-discussed article written
by Daniel Lazare in the March 1, 2002, issue of Harper's. One-sided,
trenchant, and biased to the extreme, the article follows a sensationalist
title that says it all: "False Testament: Archaeology Refutes the Bible's
Claim to History."2 Harper's has a proud history going back to Abraham
Lincoln's time, thus lending credibility to its contents. As a result,
many more conservative Jewish and Christian readers are now alarmed
that the very foundations of their faith are called into question, and
this crisis of faith has been exacerbated by a Torah and commentary
(Etaz Hayim) recently published by the United States Synagogue of Conservative
Judaism that incorporates these revisionist views.
This (nonsensationalist) article will examine
the claims made by Lazare and other revisionist critics, weigh them
against the results of mainstream biblical archaeology and scholarship,
and then describe how they are decisively wanting in both substance
and methodology.
ASSAULT ON THE OLD TESTAMENT
The new criticism of the scriptural record
is corrosive and categorical from beginning to end. It claims, for example,
that there is no evidence that any such person as Abraham ever lived
or even could have lived in its new version of ancient Israelite origins.
There was no migration from Mesopotamia to any "Promised Land." Stories
about the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, it argues, were cobbled
together out of various bits of early local lore. Moses was no more
historically real than Abraham, for there was no Israelite sojourn in
Egypt and the Exodus was a fiction; nor did Joshua conquer the "Promised
Land," since the ancient Israelites were an indigenous culture already
living in that land.
What about the monarchs Saul, David, and Solomon
and their regional empires? Surely they were historical, weren't they?
No. According to this revisionism, Jerusalem priests in the eighth and
seventh centuries BC probably invented them. In the words of Lazare,
if David is historical, he was
not a mighty potentate whose power was felt
from the Nile to the Euphrates but rather a freebooter who carved
out what was at most a small duchy in the southern highlands around
Jerusalem and Hebron. Indeed, the chief disagreement among scholars
nowadays is between those who hold that David was a petty hilltop
chieftain whose writ extended no more than a few miles in any direction
and a small but vociferous band of "biblical minimalists" who maintain
that he never existed at all.3
There never was a united Hebrew monarchy in
this overcritical view, and, according to Finkelstein, the architectural
accomplishments of David and Solomon should rather be ascribed to King
Ahab of Israel. As for religious beliefs, monotheistic Judaism was itself
a late development - again in contrast to biblical evidence - when also
the heroic stories of the patriarchs and judges were crafted to show
that Israel owned the land by rite of conquest. Probably not until we
reach King Hezekiah in the eighth century BC do the extreme critics
begin to grant historicity to the Old Testament narratives.
This attack on Old Testament Scripture is
of a full-fledged, no-holds-barred variety. Such extreme views invite
dismissal of this assault as the work of a cadre of sensation-seeking
quasischolars whose radical revisionism almost guarantees attention
in the media. This has been a trail well blazed, after all, by members
of the so-called Jesus Seminar and their notorious votes on whether
Jesus could have said or done something credited to Him in the Gospels.
The more radical biblical minimalists certainly engage in sensationalism,
but the balance of such scholars base their case almost entirely on
what they deem to be the absence of archaeological evidence that corroborates
material in the earlier eras of the Old Testament. Because their contentions
are supposedly based on academic scholarship, we must now examine their
allegations more closely.
False Claims
Abraham a Myth? Early critics in the
1800s denied the existence of Abraham's hometown, Ur of the Chaldees
(Gen. 11:31). This continued until Sir Leonard Woolley's systematic
excavations from l922-34 uncovered the immense ziggurat or temple tower
at Ur near the mouth of the Euphrates in Mesopotamia. The name "Abraham"
appears in Mesopotamian records, and the various nationalities the patriarch
encountered, as recorded in Genesis, are entirely consistent with the
peoples known at that time and place. Other details in the biblical
account regarding Abraham, such as the treaties he made with neighboring
rulers and even the price of slaves, mesh well with what is known elsewhere
in the history of the ancient Near East.4
No Migration from Mesopotamia? Semitic
tribes of the time were continually moving into and out of Mesopotamia.
In fact, Abraham's recorded trek into the Promised Land along a route
up the Euphrates valley to Haran in southern Anatolia, which has also
been identified and excavated, and then down through Syria to Canaan
is geographically accurate. Using that Fertile Crescent route was the
only way to travel successfully from Mesopotamia to the Mediterranean
in those days.
The Patriarchs? Nothing in the Genesis
account contradicts the nomadic way of life, replete with flocks and
herds, that was characteristic of life in the nineteenth or eighteenth
centuries BC. The agreements and contracts of the time, such as finding
a bride from members of the same tribe and other customs, are well known
elsewhere in the ancient Near East. To argue that the patriarchs did
not exist because their names have not been found archaeologically is
merely an argument from silence - the weakest form of argumentation
that can be used. As fair-minded historians put it, "Absence of evidence
is not necessarily evidence of absence."
No Israelite Sojourn in Egypt or Exodus
There from? Critics make much of the supposed "fact" that there
is no mention of the Hebrews in hieroglyphic inscriptions, no mention
of Moses, and no records of such a mass population movement as claimed
in the biblical account of the Exodus from Egypt. This "fact" is questionable.
The famous Israel Stele (an inscribed stone or slab) of Pharaoh Merneptah
(described more fully below) states, "Israel - his seed is not." Furthermore,
even if there were no mention whatever of the Hebrews in Egyptian records,
this also would prove nothing, especially in view of the well-known
Egyptian proclivity never to record reverses or defeats or anything
that would embarrass the majesty of the ruling monarch. Would any pharaoh
have the following words chiseled onto his monument: "Under my administration,
a great horde of Hebrew slaves successfully escaped into the Sinai Desert
when we tried to prevent them"?
The ancient Egyptians, in fact, transformed
some of their reverses into "victories." One of the most imposing monuments
in Egypt consists of four-seated colossi of Rameses II overlooking the
Nile (now Lake Nasser) at Abu-Simbel. Rameses erected the colossi to
intimidate the Ethiopians to the south who had heard correctly that
he had barely escaped with his life at the battle of Kadesh against
the Hittites, and so they thought Egypt was ripe for invasion. The story
told on the walls inside this monument, however, was that of a marvelous
Egyptian victory!
No Moses? The very name Moses is Egyptian,
as witness pharaonic names such as Thut-mose and Ra-meses. The ambient
life as described in Genesis and Exodus is entirely consonant with what
we know of ancient Egypt in the Hyksos and Empire periods: the food,
the feasts, everyday life, customs, the names of locations, the local
deities, and the like are familiar in both Hebrew and Egyptian literature.5
No Exodus? It is true that few remains
of encampments or artifacts from the Exodus era have been discovered
archaeologically in the Sinai, but a nomadic, tribal migration would
hardly leave behind permanent stone foundations of imposing buildings
en route. Hardly any archaeology is taking place in the Sinai, and if
this changes, evidence of migration may very well be uncovered. Again,
beware of the argument from silence.
No Conquest of Canaan by Joshua? The
"Battle of Jericho" continues to be fought! When Dame Kathleen Kenyon
excavated at Jericho in the 1950s, she claimed not to have found any
collapsed walls or even evidence of a living city at Jericho during
the time of Joshua's invasion - nothing for him to conquer. She did,
indeed, find an earlier, heavily fortified Jericho that c. 1550 BC was
subject to a violent conquest with fallen walls and a burnt ash layer
a yard thick, indicating destruction by fire. That, in her view, was
before Joshua and the Israelites arrived.6 Critics immediately seized
on her interpretation as solid evidence that Joshua's conquest of Jericho
must have been folklore.
Archaeologist Bryant G. Wood, however, editor
of Bible and Spade, found that Kenyon had misdated her finds and that
the destruction of Jericho actually took place in the 1400s BC when
Joshua was very much on the scene, according to earlier (1400 rather
than 1200 BC) datings of the Israelite invasion. In a brilliant 1990
article in BAR, Wood based his chronology on stratigraphy, pottery types,
carbon-14 datings, and other evidence, including collapsed walls, to
show a rather surprising archaeological confirmation of the biblical
detail recorded in Judges 6 and following.7
Kings David and Solomon Barely Historical
or Even Mythical? The critics again rely much too heavily on the
argument from silence or absence. They contend that for all the wealth
and grandeur of the reigns of David and Solomon, some of the golden
goblets and other luxurious items from their palaces should have come
to light in the excavations, but they have not. Lazare complains, "Yet
not one goblet, not one brick, has ever been found to indicate that
such a reign existed. If David and Solomon had been important regional
power brokers, one might reasonably expect their names to crop up on
monuments and in the diplomatic correspondence of the day. Yet once
again the record is silent."8
This contention, however, is hopelessly flawed
because of one simple fact: Jerusalem has been destroyed and rebuilt
some 15 to 20 times since the days of David and Solomon, and each conquest
took its toll on valuable artifacts. What, moreover, did Belshazzar
set out as tableware for his famous feast in Babylon (Dan. 5:2-3)? Gold
and silver cups that Nebuchadnezzar had plundered from the Temple in
Jerusalem!
As for David's name itself, the record is
no longer silent. In 1993, archaeologist Avraham Biran, digging at Tel
Dan in northern Israel, discovered a victory stele in three stone chunks
on which David's name is inscribed, the first archaeological reference
to David outside of the Old Testament. The Aramaic inscription contains
a boast by the king of Damascus (probably Hazael) that he had defeated
the king of Israel (probably Joram, son of Ahab) and the king of "the
house of David" (probably Ahaziah, son of Jehoram, c. 842 BC).9
This discovery alone should have quieted minimalist
claims that there was no David, but never underestimate the rigidity
of minds locked onto a course of revisionism. They are still desperately
trying to retranslate the message on the stele or even claim that the
name David is a forgery - folly compounding folly!
King Ahab of Israel As the Master Builder
of the Temple Rather than David and Solomon? This is a favorite
conclusion of archaeologist Finkelstein, but his archaeological time
grid differs from the standard model by some 150 years, which is - not
surprisingly - precisely the difference between David at 1000 BC and
Ahab at 850 BC.
One is also struck by the sudden silence of
the revisionist critics concerning the record from about the time of
King Hezekiah (fl. 700 BC) on. At that point, evidently, the Old Testament
instantly becomes "more historical" for them. This concession, of course,
is forced on them because of the overwhelming number of correlations
from archaeology, records of surrounding nations, and ancient history
in general that fully corroborate the biblical evidence. The Assyrians
did not conquer mythical northern Israelites in 722 BC, nor did Nebuchadnezzar
deport into the Babylonian captivity a legendary, folkloric band of
Jews who never existed. We leave it to the critics to explain how fact
suddenly emerges out of supposed fantasy in the Old Testament.
Wrong Methodology
In dealing with specifics such as the above,
the errors in content, procedure, and even logic employed by the revisionist
critics are apparent and might be listed as follows:
1. Overusing arguments from silence or absence
of archaeological evidence. Such arguments have often been rendered
moot by subsequent discoveries that provide such "missing" evidence.
2. Assuming that archaeology can tell us
more than is warranted by the finds. Archaeology is not the only source
of evidence, for it must also be supplemented by relevant data from
both sacred and secular history.
3. Assuming that archaeology is dispassionate
and objective, when, in fact, some excavators are quite the opposite;
unfortunately, recent political pressures have also impinged on the
discipline.
4. Assuming that there is agreement among
archaeologists as to time grids involving uncovered strata and the
artifacts therein. In fact, their interpretations of excavated evidence
often differ widely.
5. Suggesting that revisionist criticism
represents the latest and best scholarly and archaeological research
on biblical origins today. In sober fact, recent issues of journals
such as BAR and Bible and Spade are crammed with criticism of the
minimalist position, and the debate between traditional and radical
views among biblical scholars continues to rage.
6. Condoning reports, such as Lazare's in
Harper's, that are so hopelessly one-sided that bias screams out in
every other paragraph.
7. Opting for sensation rather than sense,
as is the case with extremists in any discipline.
8. Using results very selectively rather
than accounting for all the evidence. Failure to evaluate evidence
on the "other side" or even misrepresenting it results in torque,
not truth.
This is not to claim that there are no problems
in the Old Testament record; even traditionalists will admit that there
certainly are. We can all fondly wish that the author of Genesis had
given us the names of more contemporary associates of Abraham so that
the whole patriarchal era could be dated with more precision; and why,
oh, why, don't we have the actual names of the Egyptian kings involved
in the Oppression and the Exodus rather than only their generic title,
"pharaoh"? Later on, the Old Testament readily gives us the proper names
of pharaohs such as Shishak (fl. 920 BC, 1 Kings 14:25 f.) and Necho
(fl. 600 BC, 2 Kings 23:29 ff.). Had such individual names appeared
in Exodus, we would have been spared hundreds of tomes and thousands
of articles debating their identity. We all crave, moreover, far more
specific detail about the Hebrews in the period pre-1000 BC and would
likely sacrifice several chapters of Jewish ceremonial law in Leviticus
and Deuteronomy in exchange for this description.
Perhaps, though, we are asking too much of
early sacred records. No religion or culture on earth has, in fact,
more specificity in its earliest historical records than the Torah,
and it is always the case that the earliest records of any peoples will
be more spotty and compressed than the later ones. We certainly see
in the Old and New Testaments, not a progressive historicity in the
sense that the earlier records are not historical and the later records
are - as the radical revisionists claim - but rather a progressive historical
specificity.
THE FACTUAL EVIDENCE
Archaeological finds that contradict the contentions
of biblical minimalists and other revisionists have been listed above.
There are many more, however, that corroborate biblical evidence, and
the following list provides only the most significant discoveries:
A Common Flood Story. Not just the
Hebrews (Gen. 6-8), but Mesopotamians, Egyptians, and Greeks all report
a flood in primordial times. A Sumerian king list from c. 2100 BC
divides itself into two categories: those kings who ruled before a
great flood and those who ruled after it. One of the earliest examples
of Sumero-Akkadian-Babylonian literature, the Gilgamesh Epic, describes
a great flood sent as punishment by the gods, with humanity saved
only when the pious Utnapishtim (AKA, "the Mesopotamian Noah") builds
a ship and saves the animal world thereon. A later Greek counterpart,
the story of Deucalion and Phyrra, tells of a couple who survived
a great flood sent by an angry Zeus. Taking refuge atop Mount Parnassus
(AKA, "the Greek Ararat"), they supposedly repopulated the earth by
heaving stones behind them that sprang into human beings.
The Code of Hammurabi. This seven-foot
black diorite stele, discovered at Susa and presently located in the
Louvre museum, contains 282 engraved laws of Babylonian King Hammurabi
(fl. 1750 BC). The common basis for this law code is the lex talionis
("the law of the tooth"), showing that there was a common Semitic
law of retribution in the ancient Near East, which is clearly reflected
in the Pentateuch. Exodus 21:23-25, for example, reads: "But if there
is serious injury, you are to take life for life, eye for eye, tooth
for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot…" (NIV).
The Nuzi Tablets. The some 20,000
cuneiform clay tablets discovered at the ruins of Nuzi, east of the
Tigris River and datable to c. 1500 BC, reveal institutions, practices,
and customs remarkably congruent to those found in Genesis. These
tablets include treaties, marriage arrangements, rules regarding inheritance,
adoption, and the like.
The Existence of Hittites. Genesis
23 reports that Abraham buried Sarah in the Cave of Machpelah, which
he purchased from Ephron the Hittite. Second Samuel 11 tells of David's
adultery with Bathsheba, the wife of Uriah the Hittite. A century
ago the Hittites were unknown outside of the Old Testament, and critics
claimed that they were a figment of biblical imagination. In 1906,
however, archaeologists digging east of Ankara, Turkey, discovered
the ruins of Hattusas, the ancient Hittite capital at what is today
called Boghazkoy, as well as its vast collection of Hittite historical
records, which showed an empire flourishing in the mid-second millennium
BC. This critical challenge, among many others, was immediately proved
worthless - a pattern that would often be repeated in the decades
to come.
The Merneptah Stele. A seven-foot
slab engraved with hieroglyphics, also called the Israel Stele, boasts
of the Egyptian pharaoh's conquest of Libyans and peoples in Palestine,
including the Israelites: "Israel - his seed is not." This is the
earliest reference to Israel in nonbiblical sources and demonstrates
that, as of c. 1230 BC, the Hebrews were already living in the Promised
Land.
Biblical Cities Attested Archaeologically.
In addition to Jericho, places such as Haran, Hazor, Dan, Megiddo,
Shechem, Samaria, Shiloh, Gezer, Gibeah, Beth Shemesh, Beth Shean,
Beersheba, Lachish, and many other urban sites have been excavated,
quite apart from such larger and obvious locations as Jerusalem or
Babylon. Such geographical markers are extremely significant in demonstrating
that fact, not fantasy, is intended in the Old Testament historical
narratives; otherwise, the specificity regarding these urban sites
would have been replaced by "Once upon a time" narratives with only
hazy geographical parameters, if any.
Israel's enemies in the Hebrew Bible likewise
are not contrived but solidly historical. Among the most dangerous
of these were the Philistines, the people after whom Palestine itself
would be named. Their earliest depiction is on the Temple of Rameses
III at Thebes, c. 1150 BC, as "peoples of the sea" who invaded the
Delta area and later the coastal plain of Canaan. The Pentapolis (five
cities) they established - namely Ashkelon, Ashdod, Gaza, Gath, and
Ekron - have all been excavated, at least in part, and some remain
cities to this day. Such precise urban evidence measures favorably
when compared with the geographical sites claimed in the holy books
of other religious systems, which often have no basis whatever in
reality.10
Shishak's Invasion of Judah. First
Kings 14 and 2 Chronicles 12 tell of Pharaoh Shishak's conquest of
Judah in the fifth year of the reign of King Rehoboam, the brainless
son of Solomon, and how Solomon's temple in Jerusalem was robbed of
its treasures on that occasion. This victory is also commemorated
in hieroglyphic wall carvings on the Temple of Amon at Thebes.
The Moabite Stone. Second Kings 3
reports that Mesha, the king of Moab, rebelled against the king of
Israel following the death of Ahab. A three-foot stone slab, also
called the Mesha Stele, confirms the revolt by claiming triumph over
Ahab's family, c. 850 BC, and that Israel had "perished forever."
Obelisk of Shalmaneser III. In 2
Kings 9-10, Jehu is mentioned as King of Israel (841-814 BC). That
the growing power of Assyria was already encroaching on the northern
kings prior to their ultimate conquest in 722 BC is demonstrated by
a six-and-a-half-foot black obelisk discovered in the ruins of the
palace at Nimrud in 1846. On it, Jehu is shown kneeling before Shalmaneser
III and offering tribute to the Assyrian king, the only relief we
have to date of a Hebrew monarch.
Burial Plaque of King Uzziah. Down
in Judah, King Uzziah ruled from 792 to 740 BC, a contemporary of
Amos, Hosea, and Isaiah. Like Solomon, he began well and ended badly.
In 2 Chronicles 26 his sin is recorded, which resulted in his being
struck with leprosy later in life. When Uzziah died, he was interred
in a "field of burial that belonged to the kings." His stone burial
plaque has been discovered on the Mount of Olives, and it reads: "Here,
the bones of Uzziah, King of Judah, were brought. Do not open."
Hezekiah's Siloam Tunnel Inscription.
King Hezekiah of Judah ruled from 721 to 686 BC. Fearing a siege by
the Assyrian king, Sennacherib, Hezekiah preserved Jerusalem's water
supply by cutting a tunnel through 1,750 feet of solid rock from the
Gihon Spring to the Pool of Siloam inside the city walls (2 Kings
20; 2 Chron. 32). At the Siloam end of the tunnel, an inscription,
presently in the archaeological museum at Istanbul, Turkey, celebrates
this remarkable accomplishment. The tunnel is probably the only biblical
site that has not changed its appearance in 2,700 years.
The Sennacherib Prism. After having
conquered the 10 northern tribes of Israel, the Assyrians moved southward
to do the same to Judah (2 Kings 18-19). The prophet Isaiah, however,
told Hezekiah that God would protect Judah and Jerusalem against Sennacherib
(2 Chron. 32; Isa. 36-37). Assyrian records virtually confirm this.
The cuneiform on a hexagonal, 15-inch baked clay prism found at the
Assyrian capital of Nineveh describes Sennacherib's invasion of Judah
in 701 BC in which it claims that the Assyrian king shut Hezekiah
inside Jerusalem "like a caged bird." Like the biblical record, however,
it does not state that he conquered Jerusalem, which the prism certainly
would have done had this been the case. The Assyrians, in fact, bypassed
Jerusalem on their way to Egypt, and the city would not fall until
the time of Nebuchadnezzar and the Neo-Babylonians in 586 BC. Sennacherib
himself returned to Nineveh where his own sons murdered him.
The Cylinder of Cyrus the Great.
Second Chronicles 36:23 and Ezra 1 report that Cyrus the Great of
Persia, after conquering Babylon, permitted Jews in the Babylonian
Captivity to return to their homeland. Isaiah had even prophesied
this (Isa. 44:28). This tolerant policy of the founder of the Persian
Empire is borne out by the discovery of a nine-inch clay cylinder
found at Babylon from the time of its conquest, 539 BC, which reports
Cyrus's victory and his subsequent policy of permitting Babylonian
captives to return to their homes and even rebuild their temples.
So it goes. This list of correlations between
Old Testament texts and the hard evidence of Near Eastern archaeology
could easily be tripled in length. When it comes to the intertestamental
and New Testament eras, as we might expect, the needle on the gauge
of positive correlations simply goes off the scale.
To use terms such as "false testament" for
the Hebrew Bible and to vaporize its earlier personalities into nonexistence
accordingly has no justification whatever in terms of the mass of
geographical, archaeological, and historical evidence that correlates
so admirably with Scripture.
LET'S REVISE THE REVISIONISM
In view of the overwhelming evidence, to banner
an article in Harper's as "False Testament" when referring to the Hebrew
Bible is clearly an outrage. A cartoon in that article, showing the
Bible being eaten away with vast corridors cut through its text, is
an appropriately false caricature that goes with the rest of the article.
This, however, is quite typical of the way
biblical matters are reported in today's news media. An extraordinary
archaeological discovery that confirms the biblical record barely receives
any notice in the press, as witness the bones of the first biblical
personality ever discovered in November, 1990. Generally, only one in
a hundred know that the remains of Joseph Caiaphas, the high priest
who indicted Jesus before Pontius Pilate on Good Friday, were found
at that time in an ossuary in the Peace Forest of Jerusalem south of
the Temple area. Let sensation-seeking writers claim, however, that
the patriarchs were mythical, that David was a petty hilltop chieftain
if he existed at all, that Jesus married Mary Magdalene, or that God
predicted the assassination of Israeli premier Itzhaak Rabin through
some arcane Bible code (yet did nothing about it), and the press covers
it sympathetically and in full. In no way is this fair, ethical, or
even logical.
Nor is the press alone in this deception.
Radical revisionist biblical scholars and pseudoscholars, like members
of the notorious Jesus Seminar, are well aware of this sad sensationalizing
formula for success and exploit it regularly. This may, admittedly,
be impugning the motives of some in that category who are driven instead
by a desire merely to be "politically correct" when it comes to biblical
scholarship; that is, to be ultracritical of anything biblical. In this
connection, sadly, secular historians of the ancient world often have
a much higher opinion of the reliability of biblical sources than some
biblical scholars themselves!
Lest this critique be written off as the meaningless
chatter of some conservative curmudgeon, however, I must point out that,
in fact, it represents the majority view in biblical scholarship today.
University of Arizona archaeologist William Dever, for example, is well
known for his objection to the term "biblical archaeology," since it
seems to convey a probiblical bias; yet he assails some of the unwarranted
conclusions of biblical minimalists in a strongly worded article in
BAR: "Save Us from Postmodern Malarkey."11 He does not have kind words
for the minimalists in his book, What Did the Biblical Writers Know
and When Did They Know It? either. "I suggest," he writes, "that the
revisionists are nihilist not only in the historical sense but also
in the philosophical and moral sense."12
BAR, which provides the literary arena for
the traditionalist vs. minimalist battles and tries to keep a neutral
stance in the process, similarly found the Harper's article to be "only
one side of a very hot debate in the field. Nowhere does [the author]
try to evaluate the merits of the other side's case. In fact he gives
no indication that he's even aware there is another side."13
Let the debate continue, but let all the evidence
be admitted. Ever since scientific archaeology started a century and
a half ago, the consistent pattern has been this: the hard evidence
from the ground has borne out the biblical record again and again -
and again. The Bible has nothing to fear from the spade.
This article first appeared in the
Christian Research Journal, volume 27, number 2 (2004). For further
information or to subscribe to the Christian Research Journal go to:
http://www.equip.org
NOTES 1.
Israel Finkelstein and Neil Asher
Silberman, The Bible Unearthed: Archaeology's New Vision of Ancient
Israel and the Origin of Its Sacred Texts (New York: The Free Press,
2001). 2. Daniel Lazare, "False Testament: Archaeology Refutes the Bible's
Claim to History," Harper's, March 2002, 39-47. 3. Ibid., 40. 4. See
Kenneth Kitchen, "The Patriarchal Age: Myth or History?" Biblical Archaeology
Review (hereafter BAR), March/April 1995, 48ff. 5. A considerable, and
growing, body of literature exists on the Hebrews in Egypt, the role
of Joseph, the pharaoh who befriended him, the Hyksos, the pharaoh of
the Oppression, the pharaoh of the Exodus, and the Exodus itself. See
recent issues of Bible and Spade, especially no. 16 (Winter 2003). Joseph
P. Free and Howard F. Vos, Archaeology and Bible History (Grand Rapids:
Zondervan Publishing House, 1992), 69-105 is also helpful, as is Alfred
J. Hoerth, Archaeology and the Old Testament (Grand Rapids: Baker Book
House, 1999). 6. Kathleen M. Kenyon, Digging up Jericho (London: Ernest
Benn, 1957); Excavations at Jericho, vol. 3 (London: British School
of Archaeology in Jerusalem, 1981). 7. Bryant G. Wood, "Did the Israelites
Conquer Jericho?" BAR, March/April 1990, 44-58. 8. Lazare, 45-46. 9.
Hershel Shanks, "Biran at Ninety," BAR, September/October 1999, 44.
10. For example, in The Book of Mormon, proper names of places and people
have no substantiation from outside sources. 11. William A. Dever, "Save
Us from Postmodern Malarkey," BAR, March/April 2000, 28. 12. William
A. Dever, cited in Gordon Govier, "Biblical Archaeology's Dusty Little
Secret," Christianity Today, October 2003, 38. 13. Steven Feldman, "Is
the Bible a Bunch of Historical Hooey?" BAR, May/June 2002, 6.
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